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Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 1
Booms, Busts and Monetary Policy September 26, 2011
Nathan Lewis
Kiku Capital Management LLC Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007)
www.newworldeconomics.com
1
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 2
The European tradition of the “thaler” goes back 500 years. The Austrian “thaler,” the Spanish “dollar,” and the U.S. dollar were all basically identical silver coins (about 29 grams of silver).
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 3
From 1789 to 1971, the U.S. used a gold standard system. There was one permanent devaluation in 1933.
gold standard floating currency
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 4
Two Monetary Paradigms
Classical Paradigm “Hard Money”
• “Rule of Law” • Stable currency value is goal. • Avoid government manipulation. • Gold link enables stable money. • Unstable money causes problems • Leave credit up to the bankers. • Interest rates left to market. • Fixed exchange rates are good. • “You can’t devalue yourself to
prosperity.”
Mercantilist Paradigm “Soft Money”
• “Rule of Man” • “Full employment” is goal. • Constant government “management.” • Gold link prevents management. • Money manipulation solves problems. • Manipulate credit for macro effect. • Interest rates managed. • Floating currencies allow “adjustment.” • “In the long run, we’re all dead.”
We are in a Mercantilist paradigm today!
Adam Smith vs. James Denham Steuart
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 5
Britain: Yield on 2.5% Consol Bond 1700-2005
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1700 1720 1740 1760 1780 1800 1820 1840 1860 1880 1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000
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Napoleonic Wars: floating currency 1798-1821
WWI: Floating currency 1914-1925
1949: first postwar devaluation
American Revolution
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 6
Think of things in “1922 dollars”
= =
80x 1922 $20 double eagle 0.97 oz. of gold
1854 $20 double eagle 0.97 oz. of gold
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 7
We are now in a new era of declining currency value.
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 8
Nothing we haven’t seen before.
Bretton Woods 1970s depreciation “Great Moderation” Present depreciation
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 9 Source: Sharelynx
The DJIA is worth about 6 oz. of gold today = 6 $20 1922 gold pieces = $120 1922 dollars.
Gold Standard Era Floating Currency Era
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 10
We’ve already had a 7:1 decline in the real value of U.S. equities.
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 11
But valuations are still frightfully high … The dividend yield on the S&P500 is still at a level that was never once witnessed before the late 1990s stock bubble.
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 12
By Tobin’s Q and CAPE, the most reliable long-term measures, valuations today are among the highest in history.
Source: Smithers & Co.
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 13
Source: JSMineset.com
Since 1971 -- the era of floating currencies -- the “gold bugs” are now ahead of the “stock bugs.”
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 14
Source: JSMineset.com
“Gold bugs” are beating “bond bugs.”
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 15
Source: Bullionvault.com
Who says houses always go up?
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 16
Why can’t U.S. families get by anymore -- even on two incomes?
Gold Standard Floating Currency
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 17
“Real” (???) wages have been stagnant since … the end of the gold standard in 1971.
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 18
When you measure in “1922 dollars,” it looks a lot worse.
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 19
This is why the DJIA is back to 1920s levels vs. gold
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 20
$93 EPS (2011e) is $1.28 in 1925 dollars (at $1500/oz.).
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 21
Nothing places the farmer, the wage-‐earner, and all those not closely connected with financial affairs at so great a disadvantage in disposing of their labor or products as changeable "money." … You all know that fish will not rise to the fly in calm weather. It is when the wind blows and the surface is ruffled that the poor vicRm mistakes the lure for a genuine fly. So it is with the business affairs of the world. In stormy Rmes, when prices are going up and down, when the value of the arRcle used as money is dancing about-‐-‐up to-‐day and down to-‐morrow-‐-‐and the waters are troubled, the clever speculator catches the fish and fills his basket with the vicRms. Hence the farmer and the mechanic, and all people having crops to sell or receiving salaries or wages, are those most deeply interested in securing and maintaining fixity of value in the arRcle they have to take as "money.”
Andrew Carnegie, “The A B C of Money,” 1891
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 22
Does that sound like our world today?
Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 23
Thank You
Nathan Lewis
Kiku Capital Management LLC Author, Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) Newworldeconomics.com
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Nathan Lewis, author Gold: the Once and Future Money (2007) newworldeconomics.com 24
“The one essenRal quality that is needed in the arRcle which we use as a basis for exchanging all other arRcles is fixity of value. The race has insRncRvely always sought for the one arRcle in the world which most resembles the North Star among the other stars in the heavens, and used it as ‘money’ -‐-‐ the arRcle that changes least in value as the North Star is the star which changes its posiRon least in the heavens, and what the North Star is among stars the arRcle people elect as ‘money’ is among arRcles.”
Andrew Carnegie, “The A B C of Money,” 1891